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Posts with tag theatre

Just in time for audiences and Broadway, the half-price ticket booth re-opens

Filed under: Bargains, Extracurriculars, Saving, Wealth, Travel

New York City's beloved half-price TKTS ticket booth, a kiosk in the middle of Times Square which sells same-day tickets to Broadway and off-Broadway performances, is finally back in service after two and a half years of languishing through construction delays, ghastly cost overruns, and a miserable temporary location in an exhaust-choked breezeway nearby. And just in time. The arts could use a little love these days.

At Thursday's ribbon cutting with Mayor Mike Bloomberg and 60-year-old Kewpie Bernadette Peters, it was announced that Target would be buying up the first 1,000 tickets and giving them to the first people in line. The announcement was made too late for us to make use of the deal (they probably surprised us because the last thing New York City needs is an impromptu mob scene in the middle of Times Square), but hey, good for all those unsuspecting tourists.

The old booth, which shut down way back in early 2006, was about as sturdy as a porta-potty and about as welcoming as the bus station. Signs were frequently no more than hand-scratched improvisations, there were too few windows, and too-long lines wound through one of the city's most pigeon-pooped patches of ugly asphalt.

The new version, though, gives cheapsters some respect. Before, TKTS didn't take anything but cash, so tourists had to stuff hundreds of bucks in their pockets and then line up in the middle of New York City's busiest area. Not ideal. Finally, the new booth takes credit cards. There's even a window that sells only plays (meaning no musicals), by far the less popular theatrical mode for Broadway and tourists alike.

Broadway rips a page from the airlines and charges more for the aisle

Filed under: Extracurriculars, Travel

Did you think it would take long? Broadway theaters, which collectively are Manhattan's top tourist attraction, have figured out a new way to wring a little more out of showgoers: Charge 'em more to sit on the aisle. Hey, it's working for Northwest.

Aisle seats are always the first seats to be sold. They have more legroom, which is in low supply in New York's century-old houses. Although it's considered bad form to dash out to the bathroom in the middle of a live performance, having a spot on the aisle makes emergencies a cinch. Celebs, too, like to sit there since it enables a quick getaway once the curtain comes down.

And the kicker probably won't surprise you: These aisle seats can only be purchased in pairs, one next to the other. Only one of the seats will actually be on the aisle. You'll still pay the extra charge on both, though.

Saving money on kids' activities - try school!

Filed under: Kids and Money

After weeks of VH1's, "I Know My Kid's a Star," a Time story is a reminder that high schools (and middle schools) offer a financially and emotionally viable theater alternative. The Time story is really about the trend toward high schools taking on shows that are "new and edgy;" rather than the old favorites like "Oklahoma," and "Guys and Dolls." I'll get to the "edgy" issue - but the Time story reminds me that there is a much better option to investing significant parental resources into kids' activities.

For too many American families, childhood is now all about lessons. The result is over-scheduled, stressed, competitive, self-conscious kids - and their parental counterparts. Suppose your child has a theatrical flair - many do. Like the VH1 parents, you can opt to drive from acting and improvisation to voice lessons, to portrait studios and auditions, to agents. If you think for a moment that your child doesn't feel pressure to succeed from all that parental investment, (s)he does. It's all about competition.